28. heinäkuuta 1985 oli sunnuntaina tähtimerkin ♌ alla. Se oli 208 päivä vuodesta. Yhdysvaltain presidentti oli Ronald Reagan.
Jos olet syntynyt tänä päivänä, olet 40 vuotta vanha. Viimeisin syntymäpäiväsi oli maanantaina 28. heinäkuuta 2025, 49 päivää sitten. Seuraava syntymäpäiväsi on tiistaina 28. heinäkuuta 2026, 315 päivän kuluttua. Olet elänyt 14 659 päivää tai noin 351 822 tuntia tai noin 21 109 364 minuuttia tai noin 1 266 561 840 sekuntia.
28th of July 1985 News
Uutiset sellaisena kuin ne ilmestyivät New York Timesin etusivulle 28. heinäkuuta 1985
TRIUMPHANT SIKH IN PUNJAB ACCORD: HARCHAND SINGH LONGOWAL
Date: 28 July 1985
By Sanjoy Hazarika, Special To the New York Times
Sanjoy Hazarika
When Harchand Singh Longowal placed his signature alongside that of Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi on Wednesday on the accord to end the three-year Sikh confrontation with the Indian Government, many here saw it as an improbable triumph for an unlikely politician. After years of living in the shadow of a younger rival preacher-politician, who is now dead, and after a prison term and several months spent trying to establish himself as the undisputed leader of the Sikhs, Mr. Longowal, a patient, gray-bearded man, appears finally to have come into his own. Mr. Longowal's political abilities were challenged on Thursday when leaders of a more militant faction of the Akali Dal, the Sikh political party that Mr. Longowal heads, predicted the accord would fail - but their opposition was expected. More damaging was the opposition of moderate leaders in his own faction of the party, especially Prakash Singh Badal, former Chief Minister of Punjab, the northern state in which most of the Sikhs live. His misgivings surprised political commentators.
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CIVILIAN DOCTORS TO VIEW QUALITY OF MILITARY CARE
Date: 29 July 1985
By Philip M. Boffey, Special To the New York Times
Philip
The Defense Department has made what it calls an ''unprecedented decision'' to allow civilian doctors to monitor systematically the quality of care administered in the military health-care program, a Pentagon source said today. Under the new monitoring system, scheduled to go into effect no later than Jan. 1, civilian doctors would review the records and care given to about 15 percent of the patients admitted to military hospitals. They would pay particular attention to cases in which problems are most likely to arise.
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NEWS SUMMARY: SUNDAY, JULY 28, 1985
Date: 28 July 1985
International A key Senator wants to move quickly on sanctions against South Africa. Senator Richard G. Lugar, Republican of Indiana, and chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee, said that he favored imposing economic sanctions and that he believed President Reagan would go along. Both the Senate and the House have prepared such bills. The Senate's bill is milder, and Senator Lugar said he wanted the House to go along with the Senate bill. [Page 1, Column 4.]
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NEWS SUMMARY: MONDAY, JULY 29, 1985
Date: 29 July 1985
International Japan's relaxed foreign-trade rules approved by the Government Friday may do little to shrink the large and growing trade imbalance between the United States and Japan, details of the measures published in Japan indicate. The new foreign trade program will be formally announced Tuesday. [Page A1, Column 6.] Peru's foreign debt payments will be cut back over the next 12 months to 10 percent of its export earnings while it seeks renegotiation of its $14 billion foreign debt, President Alan Garcia Perez announced in his inaugural address. It was the boldest move to date by any Latin American debtor nation. Mr. Garcia said Peru planned to deal directly with its creditors without the involvement of the International Monetary Fund, which he said was ''an accomplice'' in the country's acute economic crisis. Treasury Secretary James A. Baker 3d was among the foreign dignitaries attending the inauguration. [A1:2.]
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NIXON GUARDS
Date: 28 July 1985
By Nancy Sharkey
Nancy Sharkey
FORMER President Richard M. Nixon announced last March that he would do without the Secret Service detail that has been with him since he left office 11 years ago this week. His sole reason was to save money for the Government, according to his assistant, John Taylor.
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TELLER NETWORK
Date: 28 July 1985
By Nancy Sharkey
Nancy Sharkey
EIGHT banks and other financial institutions linked computers last March to allow customers of any one to get cash and make balance inquiries at the automated teller machines of the others. The founding banks of the New York Cash Exchange - Chemical Bank; the Manufacturers Hanover Trust Company; the Marine Midland Bank; the Bank of New York; Barclays Bank; the Union Trust Company of Stamford, Conn.; the Westminster Bank U.S.A., and Goldome -had 800 teller machines among them, at 650 sites in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut.
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BIRDIE AFRICA
Date: 28 July 1985
By Nancy Sharkey
Nancy Sharkey
AFTER the bomb had been dropped on the roof and as the fire roared out of control in West Philadelphia, the badly burned boy escaped from the building at 6221 Osage Avenue, used as headquarters by the Move group. Because the boy was so small and malnourished, the police gave his age as 9; in fact, he was 13. He was admitted to Children's Hospital with burns covering his arms and legs.
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Twins Seeking To Sign Howe
Date: 29 July 1985
AP
The Minnesota Twins are ''making every effort'' to sign the former Los Angeles Dodger relief pitcher Steve Howe, the Twins' president, Howard Fox, said today.
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McCallum Wins By Knockout in 8
Date: 29 July 1985
AP
Mike McCallum, the unbeaten World Boxing Association junior-middleweight champ, successfully defended his crown today with an eighth-round knockout of David Braxton, the W.B.C.'s top contender. Referee Robert Ramirez stopped the bout at 2 minutes 26 seconds of the eighth round because Braxton had a bad cut in his left eyelid.
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Deal is Reached On Aid to Rebels
Date: 28 July 1985
While the Reagan Administration barred further talks with Nicaragua last week, two House-Senate conference committees reopened the aid pipeline to the anti-Sandinista rebels after a Congressionally ordered two-year hiatus. Brushing aside Administration objections, however, the committees prohibited the Central Intelligence Agency or the Defense Department from distributing the aid.
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